Freedom, Justice, and Decolonization

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A01=Lewis Gordon
Abya Yala
Africana Philosophy
Afropessimism
Antiblack Racism
Antiblack World
Author_Lewis Gordon
Category=JBFA
Category=JBSA
Category=JHBA
Category=QDHP
Circuitous
Decolonization
Disciplinary Decadence
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Follow
Good Life
Holds
Husserl
Idi
Infinite Resignation
Kierkegaard
Leftward Turn
Makeup
Mdw Ntr
Odd
Permanent Catastrophe
Philosophical Anthropology
Presumptive justice
Prosthetic God
Social and political philosophy
Standpoint
Teleological Suspension
Theodicy
Violating
Wild Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367632960
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Dec 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The eminent scholar Lewis R. Gordon offers a probing meditation on freedom, justice, and decolonization. What is there to be understood and done when it is evident that the search for justice, which dominates social and political philosophy of the North, is an insufficient approach for the achievements of dignity, freedom, liberation, and revolution? Gordon takes the reader on a journey as he interrogates a trail from colonized philosophy to re-imagining liberation and revolution to critical challenges raised by Afropessimism, theodicy, and looming catastrophe. He offers not forecast and foreclosure but instead an urgent call for dignifying and urgent acts of political commitment. Such movements take the form of examining what philosophy means in Africana philosophy, liberation in decolonial thought, and the decolonization of justice and normative life. Gordon issues a critique of the obstacles to cultivating emancipatory politics, challenging reductionist forms of thought that proffer harm and suffering as conditions of political appearance and the valorization of nonhuman being. He asserts instead emancipatory considerations for occluded forms of life and the irreplaceability of existence in the face of catastrophe and ruin, and he concludes, through a discussion with the Circassian philosopher and decolonial theorist, Madina Tlostanova, with the project of shifting the geography of reason.

Lewis R. Gordon is Professor and Head of the Department of Philosophy at the University of Connecticut at Storrs; Honorary President of the Global Center for Advanced Studies; Honorary Professor in the Unit for the Humanities at Rhodes University, South Africa; Chairperson of the American Philosophical Association Committee on Public Philosophy; and Chairperson of the Awards Committee and Global Collaborations for the Caribbean Philosophical Association, of which he was the organization’s first president. His books published by Routledge include Fanon and the Crisis of European Man, Existence in Black, Existentia Africana, Disciplinary Decadence, and, with Jane Anna Gordon, Not Only the Master’s Tools and Of Divine Warning.

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